The Philology of the English TongueClarendon Press, 1880 - 700 pagine |
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Pagina iv
... manner , just as they happen to be called for in the course of the investigation . If the object - language be the learner's own vernacular , this course will be something like climbing a moun- tain by the side where the slope is ...
... manner , just as they happen to be called for in the course of the investigation . If the object - language be the learner's own vernacular , this course will be something like climbing a moun- tain by the side where the slope is ...
Pagina 19
... manner learnt at second- hand from Roman culture : aş DISC , a dish ; from his handing of which a royal officer all through the Saxon period bore the title of DISC - PEGN , dish - thane . When we consider that there was much originally ...
... manner learnt at second- hand from Roman culture : aş DISC , a dish ; from his handing of which a royal officer all through the Saxon period bore the title of DISC - PEGN , dish - thane . When we consider that there was much originally ...
Pagina 20
... manner of the oldest town - names , and some names of districts . The first syllable in Winchester appears , through the Latin form of Venta , to have been the same as the Welsh gwent , a plain or open country . The first syllable in ...
... manner of the oldest town - names , and some names of districts . The first syllable in Winchester appears , through the Latin form of Venta , to have been the same as the Welsh gwent , a plain or open country . The first syllable in ...
Pagina 38
... manner very like its present employment . But when we examine into it , we find the sense attached to it was not , as now , that of possibility , but of knowledge and skill . French exercises comes to the sentence ' Can you swim ? ' he ...
... manner very like its present employment . But when we examine into it , we find the sense attached to it was not , as now , that of possibility , but of knowledge and skill . French exercises comes to the sentence ' Can you swim ? ' he ...
Pagina 54
... manner of French it was , we must point to that now spoken by the peasants of Normandy , and perhaps still more to the French dialect which has been preserved in the Channel Islands . A bold relic of our use of French as the language of ...
... manner of French it was , we must point to that now spoken by the peasants of Normandy , and perhaps still more to the French dialect which has been preserved in the Channel Islands . A bold relic of our use of French as the language of ...
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accent adjectival adjective adverb Alfred Tennyson alliteration ancient become belongs Bible called Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer collocation compound conjunction consonants Danish dative dialects distinction Dutch elder emphasis English language example expression Faery Queene familiar flat adverb flexion following quotation French words function genitival genitive German Gothic Gothic languages grammatical Greek habit haue Hebrew illustration infinitive inflections instances interjection Italian John John Keble John Milton King Latin Layamon letter literature Lord means mind modern Mosogothic native nature noun observe old Saxon onomatopoetic original Ormulum orthography participle person philological phrase plural poet poetry prefix preposition present preterite pronominal pronoun pronunciation relics rendered rhyme rhythm Romanesque Saxon seems sense sentence Shakspeare shew signifies singular sort sound speak speech spelling Spenser substantival substantive syllable symbolic words syntax termination thing thou tion traces verb vowel William Cowper writing þat